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Category Archives: Civil War

Hot Air Ballooning: the high-tech way to spy in 1861

02 Tuesday Jul 2013

Posted by tanya brassie in Civil War

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BalloonBattlefield

A lithograph depicting the battle of Fair Oaks. Lowe’s balloon can be seen in the upper right. From the Library of Congress.


Forget cyber spying — back in the 1860s, balloon spying was all the rage. During the Civil War, the Union Army used several hot air balloons to spy on Rebel forces. Although the Civil War wasn’t the first time hot air balloons were used to gather intel on opposing forces, it was the first time that military balloon reconnaissance was paired with telegraph technology, enabling swift communication between balloonists and those stationed on the ground.

Union soldiers hold onto Eagle balloon during storm.
Union soldiers hold onto Eagle balloon during storm.
Inflating the "Intrepid" balloon, May 1862
Inflating the “Intrepid” balloon, May 1862
Inflating the Intrepid in preparation for the Battle of Fair Oaks.
Inflating the Intrepid in preparation for the Battle of Fair Oaks.
Lowe ascends in order to view the Battle of Fair Oaks on May 31, 1862
Lowe ascends in order to view the Battle of Fair Oaks on May 31, 1862
Illustration from Harper's Weekly of Professor Lowe in his balloon.
Illustration from Harper’s Weekly of Professor Lowe in his balloon.
-Images from the Library of Congress.


The man to really get hot air balloon spying off the ground during the Civil War was Thaddeus S. C. Lowe. Lowe was an avid balloonist that hoped to one day cross the Atlantic Ocean via hot air balloon. In April of 1861, Lowe–usually referred to as Professor Lowe– made a well publicized, 1200 mile trip from Cincinnati, O.H. to Columbia, S.C. in a balloon. A month later, The Barre Gazette published a colorful first-hand account of the journey, detailing Lowe’s botched first attempt at landing and describing the terror and confusion felt by those who witnessed the descent of a strange floating orb in their town. (It really is a great article.)

LoweBalloonDescent

ADVENTURES OF AN AERONAUT IN THE SOUTH – Professor Lowe describes the confusion and terror of onlookers as he landed his balloon in Spartanburg S.C. during his 1200 mile balloon journey. Published by The Barre Gazette on April 25, 1861.


By June of 1861 Professor Lowe’s balloon experimentation attracted the attention of governmental officials, and newspapers reported of a “temporary arrangement” between the Government and Professor. Lowe brought his balloon to Washington to perform a series of “balloon experiments” to test the viability of balloon reconnaissance. The experiments included equipping the balloon with a telegraph and telegrapher so Lowe might communicate his observations to the ground below. The following telegraph was sent from Professor Lowe to Abraham Lincoln during one of the balloon tests conducted on June 16, 1861.

Telegraph from Lowe to Lincoln

Telegraph from Lowe to Lincoln dated June 16, 1861.

In August of 1861 Lowe’s trial ascensions were proven so valuable to the government, that he was ordered to create a special balloon for army use. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, the new balloon would measure 38 feet in diameter and 45 feet tall. Fifty women were employed to make the balloon in a period of ten days.

Two months later, in October of 1861, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported that “the balloon is certainly a great annoyance to the Rebels, and they have fallen back…the Professor [Lowe] will be too much for them, as he is now in Philadelphia (by direction of the secretary of war) constructing four more balloons, which will be stationed at various points along the enemy’s lines.” That same month the Army Balloon Corps was founded and orders for the creation for more balloons were issued.

Mammoth balloon description - Philadelphia Inquirer, Aug. 8, 1861
Mammoth balloon description – Philadelphia Inquirer, Aug. 8, 1861
More balloons constructed - Philadelphia Inquirer, Oct. 14, 1861
More balloons constructed – Philadelphia Inquirer, Oct. 14, 1861

-Newspaper articles from the Philadelphia Inquirer describing the construction of Professor Lowe’s balloon and balloons subsequently constructed.


The Army Balloon Corps continued to serve the Union throughout the war but was disbanded in 1863, following Lowe’s resignation. It seems, judging from newspaper clippings like the one below, Lowe spent the rest of the war exhibiting his war balloons in various cities across the United States.

MilitaryBalloonAmusement

Advertisement published on Nov. 8, 1864 in the amusement section of the Philadelphia Inquirer.


Sources
The Barre Gazette, 1861
Brady, Matthew B. Professor Lowe’s military balloon near Gaines Mill, Virginia. Photograph. June 1, 1862. Civil War Glass Negatives and Related Prints. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed July 2, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2012649020/.
Fair Oaks, Va. Prof. Thaddeus S. Lowe observing the battle from his balloon “Intrepid”. Photograph. May 31, 1862. Civil War Glass Negatives and Related Prints. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed July 2, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/cwp2003000067/PP/.
Fair Oaks, Virginia. Prof. Thaddeus S. Lowe replenishing balloon INTREPID from balloon CONSTITUTION. Photograph. May 1862. Civil War Glass Negatives and Prints. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed July 2, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/cwp2003004742/PP/.
Philadelphia Inquirer 1861-1865
Professor Lowe’s balloon “Eagle” in a storm. Illustration. c1861. Civil War. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed July 2, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2012647351/.
Prof. T. Lowe making a balloon ascension on a reconnoitring expedition to Vienna, Va. Photograph. 1861. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed July 2, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2004682054/.

The Telegraph Boys of the Civil War

26 Wednesday Jun 2013

Posted by tanya brassie in Civil War

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Tags

Civil War, Crappy jobs, Telegraph, U.S. Military Telegraph Corps

 [Earlier this month, the Christian Science Monitor reported that the world’s last telegram would be sent in less than a month (on July 15) from India. People everywhere, myself included, felt a twinge of sadness. However, it turns out this is not the world’s last telegram, and not even India’s. The only thing going away is the Indian national telecommunications company, Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited. This article from Ars Technica explains more about it.]

The telegraph exemplified here alongside, the team press, the locomotive and the steamboat as a symbol of nineteenth century progress.

The telegraph, exemplified here alongside, the steam press, the locomotive and the steamboat as a symbol of nineteenth century progress. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.


On January 6, 1838, the first telegram was successfully sent in the United States over two miles of wire near Morristown, New Jersey. Nearly 25 years later, by the outbreak of the Civil War, telegraph wires criss-crossed the continent, and the telegram had become an integral form of communication. Three commercial telegraph companies operated in the United States at this time: Western Union, American and Southwest. With the eruption of the Civil War, a dire need arose in Washington DC for secure communication lines, and all commercial telegraph lines surrounding the city were seized by the government. In April of 1861, the Military Telegraph Corps was formed with the purpose of keeping officials in Washington abreast of developments on the battlefield.

Of all the jobs in the Military Telegraph Corps, constructing telegraph lines on the battlefield was the most perilous. Teams of 15 to 150 young men–most of the military telegraphers were 16-22 years of age–would work together to construct the lines. First, a receiving station was set up at the army headquarters. A wagon would then head out, towards the action, functioning as a sending station.

HarpersWeeklyTelegraph

Image published in Harper’s Weekly on January 24, 1863 accompanying the story, “The Military Telegraph.” Courtesy of the Library of Congress.


An article published in Harper’s Weekly from January 24, 1863 titled, “The Army Telegraph,” gives the following description:

The army signal-telegraph has been so far perfected that in a few hours quite a large force can be in constant connection with head-quarters. This, while a battle is progressing, is a great convenience. The wire used is a copper one insulated, raised on light poles, made expressly for the purpose, on convenient trees, or trailed along fences. The wire and the instrument can be easily carried in a cart, which as it proceeds unwinds the wire, and, when a connection is made, becomes the telegraph-office. Where the cart can not go the men carry the drum of wire by hand. In the picture (see above) the cart has come to a halt, and the signal-men are hastening along—some with the drum, while others with crow-bars make the holes for the poles, upon which it is rapidly raised. The machine is a simple one, worked by a handle, which is passed around a dial-plate marked with numerals and the alphabet. By stopping at the necessary letters a message is easily spelled out upon the instrument at the other end of the line, which repeats by a pointer every move on the dial-plate. The whole thing is so simple that any man able to read and write can work it with facility.

LayingWireTelegraphCorps

Members of the Military Telegraph Corps lay telegraph wires on a Civil War Battle Field in April 1864. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.


In 1889, former military telegrapher William B. Wilson gave a speech before the United Service Club of Philadelphia. Although the speech was mostly about his interactions with President Lincoln, Wilson opened with this remembrance of his experience during the war:

A better-natured, more intelligent-looking or harder working band of young men did not exist in the army. They were ready and willing to go anywhere at a moment’s notice, and, if necessary, to work day and night without rest uncomplainingly. Oft times they were sent where the sky was the only protecting roof over their heads, a tree stump their only office, and the ground their downy couch. Provisioned with a handful of hard bread, a canteen of water, pipe, tobacco pouch and matches, they would open and work an office at the picket line, in order to keep the commanding general in instantaneous communication with his most advanced forces, or to herald the first approach of the enemy. When retreat became necessary it was their place to remain behind and to announce that the rear guard had passed the danger line between it and the pursuing foe. 

Constructing telegraph line in the field was a dangerous job. According to Wilson, only 300 of the 1200 boys who served as military telegraphers survived. Some died in battle while most died afterwards from wounds or imprisonment. By the war’s end 15,389 miles of telegraph line had been constructed which were eventually sold back to commercial companies.

Telegraph wire and wagon, 1861-65
Telegraph wire and wagon, 1861-65
Field Headquarters, 1863
Field Headquarters, 1863
Field Telegraph Station, 1864
Field Telegraph Station, 1864
Field Telegraph Battery Wagon, c1865
Field Telegraph Battery Wagon, c1865
Field Telegraph Station, 1863
Field Telegraph Station, 1863

–Photos courtesy of the Library of Congress.


After the war, the young men who served in the U.S. Military Telegraph Corps were excluded from the military glory bestowed upon the enlisted: since those who served as military telegraphers were not soldiers, but rather civilians, they were not considered eligible for military honors or pensions, a fact that greatly disturbed many. “A hundred nameless graves throughout the battle-fields of the Union attest their devotion unto death to the sublime cause in which they were engaged,” Wilson lamented, “and yet the Government they loved and labored for never as much thanked them for their services.” It wasn’t until 1897 that President Cleveland authorized certificates of honorable mention to be bestowed upon the military telegraphers. However, an arrangement to provide the boys with pensions was never made.


Sources
“Army Telegraph.” Harper’s Weekly, January 23, 1863, 53-54.
Beatleton, VA. Group of military telegraph operators, headquarters, Army of the Potomac. Photograph. 1863. Selected Civil War Photographs, 1861-1865. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed June 26, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/cwp2003000212/PP/.
Campe of Military Telegraph Corps, Bealeton, Va., August 1863. Photograph. August 1863. Civil War Glass Negatives and Related Prints. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed June 26, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2013647871/.
David, Bates Homer. Lincoln in the Telegraph Office: Recollections of the United States Military Telegraph Corps During the Civil War. New York: Century Company, 1907.
Field Telegraph Station. Photograph. 1864. Civil War. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed June 26, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2011661060/.
O’Sullivan, Timothy H. Military Telegraph Construction Corps. Photograph. April 1864. Civil War Glass Negatives and Related Prints. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed June 26, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2012649236/.
Progress of the Century. Image. c1876. Popular Graphic Arts. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed June 26, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/90716345/
Wagon parked near a telegraph pole in foreground with a camp in the background. Photograph. c1865. Civil War Glass Negatives and Related Prints. Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Accessed June 26, 2013. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2012648030/.
Wilson, William B. A Glimpse of the United States Military Telegraph Corps and of Abraham Lincoln. Harrisburg, PA: Meyers Printing and Publishing House, 1889.

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